Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
September 5, 2023 // National

Pope: Synod Won’t Be Secret, but Won’t Be Open to Media

Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

ABOARD THE PAPAL FLIGHT FROM MONGOLIA (CNS) – The Synod of Bishops is not a television show or a parliamentary debate, and its discussions will not be open to the public or to reporters, Pope Francis said.

“We must safeguard the synodal climate,” the pope responded on Monday, September 4, when asked by journalists about access to the discussions at the assembly of the Synod of Bishops, which will be held October 4-29.

“This isn’t a television program where you talk about everything; no, it is a religious moment, a religious exchange,” he told reporters flying back to Rome with him from Mongolia.

Pope Francis answers questions from journalists aboard his flight back to Rome from Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, Sept. 4, 2023, after a four-day visit to the Asian country. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

The synod process began in October of 2021 with a succession of listening sessions on the parish, diocesan, national, and regional levels focused on creating a more “synodal Church,” where each person feels welcomed, valued, and called to contribute and to share the Gospel.

After so many Catholics around the world devoted their time and their prayers to the process, an initial idea was to livestream the general discussions from the synod hall or at least allow reporters some access.

Pope Francis made it clear on the plane that would not happen. An official summary of the day’s discussions – without saying who said what – will be made by the synod’s communication committee, led by Paolo Ruffini, Prefect of the Vatican Dicastery for Communication.

Beyond the anonymous, summarized points, journalists will try to interview participants to at least get individual points of view about the day’s synod work. Bishop Rhoades is one of five American prelates chosen to represent the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops at the Synod of Bishops in October.

Pope Francis told reporters that each synod member – including women and laymen for the first time – would have three or four minutes to address the assembly. Each address will be followed by three or four minutes of silence “for prayer.”

“Without this spirit of prayer, there is no synodality, it’s just politics, parliamentarianism,” he said.

Having a committee summarize the discussions for the media is necessary “to safeguard the religiosity (of the synod) and safeguard the freedom of those who speak” but may not want to do so publicly, he said.

“But more open than that, I don’t know,” he said. “The commission will be very respectful of the speeches of each person and will try not to gossip, but to recount things about how the synod is progressing that are constructive for the Church.”

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